Tobago Hotel and Tourism Association president Alpha Lorde believes there is a disconnect in the service being provided by Caribbean Airlines Ltd (CAL) and the demand of consumers.
Lorde spoke with Newsday on Wednesday, a day after a CAL press release which gave an update on the airline’s operations on the domestic airbridge from December 2022 to February 2023.
According to CAL, since December 2022 on average of just under 3,000 seats per month on flights between TT were empty. CAL said December was the busiest month in the three-month period as 4,980 seats were added to the 25,864 seats initially made available for flights to Tobago, with 440 flights departing the Piarco International Airport to the ANR Robinson International Airport. CAL said that of the 30,844 seats available, 29,912 seats were occupied during the period, indicating that only 932 seats to Tobago were unused in December.
Lorde said, “We’re happy that CAL is able to provide flights that accommodated 80 per cent or more capacity, but at the same time, we the operators on the ground in Tobago are continuously inundated with persons saying that they’re not able to get a flight or that they’re having this difficulty or that difficulty.
"There must be something wrong somewhere why we continue to have that problem and I think the objective has to be on solving the problem, not necessarily proving one person right or wrong.”
He added, “We continue to have continuous problems with persons not being able to (get to) the island. I probably travelled four days last week in a seven-day stretch and every one of those days, I had to wait in the airport probably three hours in one of the directions...That’s not because I had pre-planned engagements, it was just because things happen and I had to move, so I think there is something to be looked at.”
He noted that for Tobago's tourism product to grow and be sustainable, airlift between TT must be more reliable.
“When I say reliable, I’m not necessarily talking about it leaving on time, but a more reliable service from the perspective of commuting to and from.
“If I have to go to Port of Spain now – if something comes up and I have to go to Port of Spain on Friday morning and I would like to come back on Friday, there is a strong likelihood that I could get to Trinidad but I cannot get back.
"There is no one weekend that somebody could say arbitrarily, Wednesday or Thursday, 'You know what, I’m going to Tobago with my partner. I’m going Tobago with friends,' and be able to book and get a flight.
He said Tobago is sufficiently dependent on the airlift not only for tourism but for commerce in more ways than one.
“For Tobago to have a fighting chance, we have to get to a place where that airlift works for everybody, and it currently, unfortunately right now, doesn’t. There is some problem in the system; whether it be a reservation-driven problem in terms of the systems they use or the scheduling of flights and when.”
He said one of the pressing issues is the difficulty to access flights to To